Connect with us

Technologies

Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for June 10, #260

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 260, for June 10.

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.


Today’s Connections: Sports Edition was fun but not too difficult. It helps to know a little baseball, and to be familiar with football in a certain city acclaimed for its weather and zoo. Read on for hints and the answers.

Connections: Sports Edition is out of beta now, making its debut on Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 9. That’s a sign that the game has earned enough loyal players that The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by the Times, will continue to publish it. It doesn’t show up in the NYT Games app but now appears in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can continue to play it free online.  

Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta

Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.

Yellow group hint: Throw it in there.

Green group hint: How to watch.

Blue group hint: Signal-callers, in a famously sunny city.

Purple group hint: Moving back and forth.

Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Yellow group: Baseball pitches that end in «ball.»

Green group: Ways to take in a sporting event.

Blue group: Chargers QBs, past and present.

Purple group: Things one can swing.

Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words

What are today’s Connections: Sports Edition answers?

The yellow words in today’s Connections

The theme is baseball pitches that end in «ball.» The four answers are curve, fast, knuckle and screw.

The green words in today’s Connections

The theme is ways to take in a sporting event. The four answers are in person, radio, streaming and television.

The blue words in today’s Connections

The theme is Chargers QBs, past and present. The four answers are Brees, Fouts, Herbert and Rivers.

The purple words in today’s Connections

The theme is things one can swing. The four answers are baseball bat, fist, golf club and momentum.

Toughest Connections: Sports Edition categories

The Connections: Sports Edition puzzle can be tough, but it really depends on which sports you know the most about. My husband aces anything having to do with Formula 1, my best friend is a hockey buff, and I can answer any question about Minnesota teams.

That said, it’s hard to pick the toughest Connections categories, but here are some I found exceptionally mind-blowing recently.

#1: Series A Clubs, Jan. 11. Answers: Atalanta, Juventus, Lazio, Roma.

#2: WNBA MVPs, Jan. 21. Answers: Catchings, Delle Donne, Fowles and Stewart.

#3: Premier League team nicknames, Jan. 17. Answers: Bees, Cherries, Foxes and Hammers.

#4: Homophones of NBA player names, Jan. 26. Answers: Barns, Connect, Heart and Hero.

Technologies

Today’s Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for June 12, #1454

Here are hints — and the answer — for today’s Wordle No. 1,454 for June 12.

Looking for the most recent Wordle answer? Click here for today’s Wordle hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles.


We’re six months from Christmas, but today’s Wordle puzzle answer relates to a Christmas carol. If you need a new starter word, check out our list of which letters show up the most in English words. If you need hints and the answer, read on.

Today’s Wordle hints

Before we show you today’s Wordle answer, we’ll give you some hints. If you don’t want a spoiler, look away now.

Wordle hint No. 1: Repeats

Today’s Wordle answer has no repeated letters.

Wordle hint No. 2: Vowels

There are two vowels in today’s Wordle answer.

Wordle hint No. 3: First letter

Today’s Wordle answer begins with V.

Wordle hint No. 4: Merry Christmas!

Today’s Wordle answer is the name of one of Santa’s reindeer.

Wordle hint No. 5: Meaning

Today’s Wordle answer can refer to a female fox.

TODAY’S WORDLE ANSWER

Today’s Wordle answer is VIXEN.

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle answer, June 11,  No. 1453 was PLAID.

Recent Wordle answers

June 7, No. 1449: REUSE

June 8, No. 1450: LEASE

June 9, No. 1451: BOARD

June 10, No. 1452: TAFFY

Continue Reading

Technologies

Apple’s Games App Unveiled at WWDC 2025 Closes the Book on Game Center

Apple’s new video game app will come preinstalled on their mobile devices, Macs and smart TVs. As a one-stop hub for gaming, it’ll make Game Center truly obsolete.

At WWDC 2025 on Monday, Apple announced Games, a streamlined app store and unified library for gamers using multiple Apple devices — showing a greater commitment to the video game industry than ever before.

The App Store won’t be rendered useless, since you’ll still need to access it for nongaming app downloads. But the old Game Center app, which provided leaderboards and social features to mobile gamers (and has long been relegated to a deep, dark corner of the iPhone’s Settings menus), will finally be reaching a point of obsolescence.

Once it launches later this year, the Games app will be preinstalled on all new Apple devices. The hub will allow gamers who are deeply embedded in Apple’s product ecosystem to launch their favorite titles from their mobile devices, Macs and smart TVs.

The app provides multiple tabs to manage your gaming experience on Apple devices. The streamlined interface includes Home, Apple Arcade, Library and Play Together tabs, as well as a search feature that will allow you to delve into a dedicated game storefront.

The Games app’s Home tab allows gamers to quickly check out new events and updates for the mobile games they frequently play, while the Library tab lets users scroll through any game they’ve ever downloaded from the App Store.

The new app will also serve as a hub for Apple’s other recent endeavor in the gaming space, Apple Arcade. This curated gaming subscription service launched in September 2019 and allows subscribers to download and play hundreds of games handpicked by Apple employees. The Apple Arcade includes some of the biggest indie successes and retro gaming ports, as well as classic fan-favorites from the App Store with some additional bells and whistles.

The Games app is a hybrid gaming app store and social hub, making it much more front and center than the Game Center application. Game Center functionality has long been buried within Apple’s mobile device settings, but it’s possible that this new hub fares better now that Apple has built out a scaffolding of mobile gaming infrastructure with Apple Arcade.

The Game Center leaderboards will be revamped and integrated into the new Games application through the Play Together feature. Within the Play Together tab, people will be able to keep up with what their friends are playing, compare achievements and high scores and invite other gamers to multiplayer games.

The announcement of the Games hub comes on the heels of Apple’s acquisition of RAC7, the developer of Apple Arcade hit Sneaky Sasquatch. An investment in first-party developers could signal that Apple wants to pursue some level of gaming exclusivity on its platforms.

Continue Reading

Technologies

I Want Workout Buddy to Be More Boot Camp Trainer Than Cheerleader on the Apple Watch

Commentary: The Apple Watch’s new coaching feature in watchOS 26 taps your fitness data for live feedback, but don’t expect detailed training plans just yet.

I was expecting, and hoping, Apple would launch some kind of AI-powered health feature on the Apple Watch at WWDC 2025, but Workout Buddy wasn’t exactly what I had in mind.

I’m the kind of person who spoils any and all surprises by reading the last page of a good mystery novel, or the finale synopsis of a Netflix whodunit before I’ve even gotten through the pilot. So I went into WWDC, Apple’s annual developers conference, having read all the rumors, feeling pretty confident that I knew most of what was coming to WatchOS 26: a smarter Health app with AI coaching that could finally turn all my fitness metrics into meaningful, personalized guidance.

What we actually got during Apple’s WWDC keynote was a bit different… and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Rather than unleashing a flood of generic coaching suggestions or unsolicited advice (like caffeine restriction windows, which should not exist in my vocabulary), Apple is being intentionally conservative with its approach to AI on the watch, testing the waters with Workout Buddy and laying the groundwork for more meaningful, context-aware insights.

What Is Workout Buddy?

Workout Buddy isn’t meant to be a coach (at least not in the traditional sense). It won’t train you for a marathon or map out a four-week plan to boost your VO2 max. What it will do is act as a voice in your ear, offering encouragement during a workout based on your past fitness data. Think: «That was your fastest mile ever,» or «You’ve just crossed 500 miles for the year.»

For some people, that kind of affirmation might be enough to keep pushing forward. But I’m the kind of runner who thrives on structure and tough love. I should note that I haven’t tested Workout Buddy, but from what Apple showed off, Workout Buddy won’t cut it for me — at least not yet. I already rely on pace and heart rate alerts to let me know when I’m slacking. What I really need is a drill-sergeant-style coach that handles the math for me, so I can focus on my stride, breathing and whatever podcast is carrying me through mile four.

What Workout Buddy means for the future

What Workout Buddy is doing is technically impressive, combining exercise and health information and turning that into a conversational voice that gives you a personalized pep talk. It proves that Apple has both the data and the processing power to analyze workouts in real time and turn that data into something meaningful. It’s the first step toward a more responsive, intelligent Apple Watch experience that doesn’t just track your fitness, but actively helps you improve it.

It also offers a window into Apple’s broader strategy for AI on the Watch. Whether due to hardware limitations (Workout Buddy relies on Apple Intelligence, which requires an iPhone 15 or newer model communicating with the watch) or just Apple being Apple (cautious, user-first and deliberate), the result is a feature that feels thoughtfully scoped rather than rushed and half baked. It’s not shouting unsolicited advice or drowning users in confusing metrics. It’s dipping a toe into coaching, not diving in headfirst.

Now that the groundwork is there, it feels like only a matter of time before we get a true AI-powered health coach.

And if this voice assistant really is the start of something smarter and more didactic, can it please expand to other areas of health too? I’ve never been a fan of sleep tracking. But maybe, if I had the right incentives or feedback, I’d get on board. The new Vitals app already does a decent job of flagging early signs of illness, but imagine a proactive sleep coach that tells me my room’s too hot to hit deep sleep. That’s the kind of data driven encouragement I’d actually listen to.

For now, Workout Buddy is limited to eight workout types: indoor and outdoor running and walking, outdoor cycling, HIIT, functional strength and traditional strength training. It’ll arrive in September with the watchOS 26 update — alongside a handful of other features you can read about here.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © Verum World Media